US7746776B1 - Systems and method for dropping data using a drop profile - Google Patents
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- US7746776B1 US7746776B1 US11/853,190 US85319007A US7746776B1 US 7746776 B1 US7746776 B1 US 7746776B1 US 85319007 A US85319007 A US 85319007A US 7746776 B1 US7746776 B1 US 7746776B1
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
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- H04L47/00—Traffic control in data switching networks
- H04L47/10—Flow control; Congestion control
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- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
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- H—ELECTRICITY
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- H04L47/00—Traffic control in data switching networks
- H04L47/10—Flow control; Congestion control
- H04L47/30—Flow control; Congestion control in combination with information about buffer occupancy at either end or at transit nodes
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- H—ELECTRICITY
- H04—ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
- H04L—TRANSMISSION OF DIGITAL INFORMATION, e.g. TELEGRAPHIC COMMUNICATION
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- H04L47/10—Flow control; Congestion control
- H04L47/32—Flow control; Congestion control by discarding or delaying data units, e.g. packets or frames
- H04L47/326—Flow control; Congestion control by discarding or delaying data units, e.g. packets or frames with random discard, e.g. random early discard [RED]
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- H04L49/9063—Intermediate storage in different physical parts of a node or terminal
- H04L49/9078—Intermediate storage in different physical parts of a node or terminal using an external memory or storage device
Definitions
- the present invention relates generally to congestion control during data transfer and, more particularly, to systems and methods for dropping data using a drop profile.
- Network devices such as routers, relay streams of data through a network from a source to a destination.
- the network devices include one or more memory subsystems to temporarily buffer data while the network devices perform network-related functions, such as route processing or accounting.
- a data stream may be considered a pipe of data packets belonging to a communication between a particular source and a particular destination.
- a network device may assign a variable number of queues (e.g., where a queue may be considered a logical first-in, first-out (FIFO) buffer) to a data stream.
- a queue may be considered a logical first-in, first-out (FIFO) buffer
- FIFO first-in, first-out
- stream bandwidth ⁇ 0 n - 1 ⁇ ⁇ queue bandwidth .
- a problem that may arise in the use of queues is that congestion occurs if data builds up too quickly in the queues (i.e., data is enqueued at a faster rate than it is dequeued).
- Network devices typically address this problem by notifying sources of the packets of the congestion. This notification sometimes takes the form of dropping more recent packets received from the sources. It is sometimes a difficult and time-consuming process, however, to decide whether to drop a packet from a queue.
- the drop profile may differ for different data streams and possibly for different data in the same data stream.
- a system selectively drops data from queues.
- the system includes a drop table that stores drop probabilities.
- the system selects one of the queues to examine and generates an index into the drop table to identify one of the drop probabilities for the examined queue.
- the system determines whether to drop data from the examined queue based on the identified drop probability.
- a network device in another implementation consistent with the principles of the invention, includes groups of queues and drop engines corresponding to the queue groups. Each of the queue groups corresponds to a data stream. Each of the drop engines selects one of the queues to examine, identifies a drop probability for data in the selected queue, and determines whether to drop data from the selected queue based on the identified drop probability.
- a method for selectively dropping data from queues that temporarily store data includes selecting one of the queues to examine; identifying a drop probability for data in the examined queue; comparing the drop probability to a random number; and determining whether to drop the data from the examined queue based on a result of the comparison.
- a system selectively drops data from queues.
- the system includes queues that temporarily store data and a drop engine.
- the drop engine selects one of the queues to examine, determines a static amount of memory allocated to the selected queue, determines an amount of memory used by the selected queue, identifies a drop probability for data in the selected queue based on the static amount of memory allocated to the selected queue and the amount of memory used by the selected queue, and determines whether to drop the data from the selected queue based on the identified drop probability.
- a drop engine selectively drops data from multiple queues.
- the drop engine includes drop tables, indexing logic, and drop decision logic.
- Each of the drop tables is configured to store multiple drop probabilities.
- the indexing logic is configured to select one of the drop tables and generate an index into the selected drop table to identify one of the drop probabilities.
- the drop decision logic is configured to determine whether to drop data from one of the queues based on the identified drop probability.
- a drop engine selectively drops data from multiple queues.
- the drop engine includes a drop table, indexing logic, and drop decision logic.
- the drop table is configured to store multiple drop probabilities.
- the indexing logic is configured to generate an index into the drop table to identify one of the drop probabilities.
- the drop decision logic includes a random number generator, a comparator, and a logic operator.
- the random number generator is configured to generate a random number.
- the comparator is configured to compare the identified drop probability to the random number.
- the logic operator is configured to perform a logical operation on a result of the comparison and a signal that indicates whether the identified drop probability is greater than zero and output, based on the logical operation, a decision signal that indicates whether to drop data from one of the queues.
- FIG. 1 is a diagram of an exemplary network device in which systems and methods consistent with the principles of the invention may be implemented;
- FIG. 2 is an exemplary diagram of a packet forwarding engine (PFE) of FIG. 1 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention
- FIG. 3 is an exemplary diagram of a portion of the memory of FIG. 2 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention
- FIG. 4 is an exemplary diagram of a portion of the packet information memory of FIG. 3 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention
- FIG. 5 is an exemplary diagram of the queue control engine of FIG. 4 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention
- FIG. 6 is an exemplary diagram of the oversubscription engine of FIG. 5 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention
- FIG. 7 is an exemplary time line that facilitates measurement of bandwidth use according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- FIG. 8 is a flowchart of exemplary oversubscription processing according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- FIGS. 9A-9D are exemplary diagrams that illustrate oversubscription according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- FIG. 10 is an exemplary diagram of the drop engine of FIG. 5 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- FIG. 11 is an exemplary graph of a drop profile consistent with the principles of the invention.
- FIG. 12 is an exemplary diagram of the drop decision logic of FIG. 10 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- FIGS. 13A and 13B are flowcharts of exemplary processing by the drop engine of FIG. 10 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- FIG. 14 is an exemplary diagram of queue selection using HIVec and LOVec vectors according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- Systems and methods consistent with the principles of the invention use one or more drop profiles, or drop tables, in determining the probability of dropping data from a queue. The drop probability may then be further processed to make the ultimate drop decision. Such mechanisms provide efficient data dropping compared to conventional mechanisms.
- FIG. 1 is a diagram of an exemplary network device in which systems and methods consistent with the principles of the invention may be implemented.
- the network device takes the form of a router 100 .
- Router 100 may receive one or more packet streams from a physical link, process the stream(s) to determine destination information, and transmit the stream(s) on one or more links in accordance with the destination information.
- Router 100 may include a routing engine (RE) 110 and multiple packet forwarding engines (PFEs) 120 interconnected via a switch fabric 130 .
- Switch fabric 130 may include one or more switching planes to facilitate communication between two or more of PFEs 120 .
- each of the switching planes includes a single or multi-stage switch of crossbar elements.
- RE 110 performs high level management functions for router 100 .
- RE 110 communicates with other networks and systems connected to router 100 to exchange information regarding network topology.
- RE 110 creates routing tables based on network topology information, creates forwarding tables based on the routing tables, and sends the forwarding tables to PFEs 120 .
- PFEs 120 use the forwarding tables to perform route lookup for incoming packets.
- RE 110 also performs other general control and monitoring functions for router 100 .
- Each of PFEs 120 connects to RE 110 and switch fabric 130 .
- PFEs 120 receive packets on physical links connected to a network, such as a wide area network (WAN), a local area network (LAN), etc.
- a network such as a wide area network (WAN), a local area network (LAN), etc.
- Each physical link could be one of many types of transport media, such as optical fiber or Ethernet cable.
- the packets on the physical link are formatted according to one of several protocols, such as the synchronous optical network (SONET) standard or Ethernet.
- SONET synchronous optical network
- FIG. 2 is an exemplary diagram of a PFE 120 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- PFE 120 may include two packet processors 210 and 220 , each connected to a memory system 230 and RE 110 .
- Packet processors 210 and 220 communicate with RE 110 to exchange routing-related information.
- packet processors 210 and 220 may receive forwarding tables from RE 110
- RE 110 may receive routing information from packet processor 210 that is received over the physical link.
- RE 110 may also send routing-related information to packet processor 210 for transmission over the physical link.
- Packet processor 210 connects to one or more physical links. Packet processor 210 may process packets received from the incoming physical links and prepare packets for transmission on the outgoing physical links. For example, packet processor 210 may perform route lookup based on packet header information to determine destination information for the packets. For packets received from the links, packet processor 210 may store data in memory system 230 . For packets to be transmitted on the links, packet processor 210 may read data from memory system 230 .
- Packet processor 220 connects to switch fabric 130 .
- Packet processor 220 may process packets received from switch fabric 130 and prepare packets for transmission to switch fabric 130 .
- packet processor 220 may store data in memory system 230 .
- packet processor 220 may read data from memory system 230 .
- Packet processors 210 and 220 may store packet data and other packet information, such as control and/or address information, within separate portions of memory system 230 .
- FIG. 3 is an exemplary diagram of a portion of memory system 230 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- memory system 230 includes a data memory system 310 and a packet information memory system 320 .
- Data memory system 310 may store the data from a packet, possibly in non-contiguous locations.
- Packet information memory system 320 may store the corresponding packet information in queues based on, for example, the packet stream to which the packet information corresponds. Other information, such as destination information and type of service (TOS) parameters for the packet, may be used in determining the particular queue(s) in which to store the packet information.
- TOS type of service
- FIG. 4 is an exemplary diagram of a portion of packet information memory system 320 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- packet information memory system 320 includes queues 410 , dequeue engine 420 , and queue control engine 430 .
- memory system 320 may include an enqueue engine (not shown) that stores data in queues 410 .
- Packet information memory system 320 may concurrently store packet information corresponding to multiple, independent packet streams.
- memory system 320 may contain separate queues 410 , dequeue engines 420 , and queue control engines 430 corresponding to each of the packet streams.
- dequeue engine 420 and queue control engine 430 may correspond to multiple streams.
- Queues 410 may include a group of first-in, first-out (FIFO) buffers that corresponds to a single stream. Other queues (not shown) may be provided for other packet streams. Queues 410 share the bandwidth of a single packet stream. In one implementation, each of queues 410 is allocated a static amount of packet information memory system 320 at configuration time. The amount of packet information memory system 320 allocated to a particular queue may be determined based on factors, such as the round trip time (Rtt), delay, and bandwidth associated with the stream, that minimize the chance that the queue will overflow.
- Rtt round trip time
- Each of queues 410 may have three parameters associated with it: a weight between 0 and 1, a priority PR parameter that is either HI or LO, and a rate-control RC parameter that is either ON or OFF.
- a queue's weight determines the fraction of the stream's bandwidth B that is statically allocated to the queue. For a queue with weight w, the statically allocated bandwidth sba is equal to w*B.
- the sum of the weights of the queues (e.g., queues 410 ) for a stream equal one. In other words, the entire bandwidth of a stream is allocated to the queues associated with that stream.
- the PR parameter specifies which of two priority levels (HI or LO) is associated with a queue. In other implementations, there may be more than two priority levels. Queues 410 associated with a HI priority may be serviced before queues 410 associated with a LO priority. Queues 410 at the same priority level may, for example, be serviced in a round robin manner.
- the RC parameter determines whether a queue is allowed to oversubscribe (i.e., output more packet information than its statically allocated bandwidth). If RC is OFF, then the queue is permitted to send up to the stream bandwidth B (the total bandwidth for the stream). If RC is ON, then the queue is rate controlled and not permitted to send more than its statically allocated bandwidth sba.
- Each of queues 410 is allocated a particular portion of data memory system 310 that stores packet data corresponding to the packet information stored by the queue.
- the size of the portion of data memory system 310 allocated to a particular queue (referred to as the static memory allocated sma) may be determined based on the stream's static bandwidth. For example, the sma may be defined as the round trip time (Rtt) multiplied by the statically allocated bandwidth sba. The statically allocated bandwidth sba was defined above. In another implementation, the sma may also take into account the speed of the stream.
- the bandwidth allocated to a stream is fixed at B even though different queues within the stream may have dynamically changing bandwidth utilization, as will be described below.
- the stream itself never needs more than Rtt (round trip time, which is defined as the maximum time allowed for a packet to travel from the source to the destination and send an acknowledgement back)*B of data memory system 310 .
- Rtt round trip time, which is defined as the maximum time allowed for a packet to travel from the source to the destination and send an acknowledgement back
- This amount of data memory system 310 may be denoted by MA.
- a delay bandwidth buffer is an amount of packet information memory system 320 equal to the network round trip time (Rtt) multiplied by the sum of the bandwidths of the output interfaces.
- Rtt network round trip time
- Dequeue engine 420 may include logic that dequeues packet information from queues 410 .
- the order in which the streams are examined by dequeue engine 420 is referred to as the service discipline.
- the service discipline may include round robin or time division multiplexing techniques.
- dequeue engine 420 may select one of queues 410 and dequeue packet information from it.
- dequeue engine 420 may use the queue parameters w, PR, and RC.
- the corresponding packet data in data memory system 310 may be read out and processed.
- Queue control engine 430 may dynamically control the amount of data memory system 310 used by each queue. Since the total bandwidth for the stream is B, queue control engine 430 effectively controls the total amount of data memory system 310 used by queues 410 in a stream so that it does not exceed MA. The memory is allocated at the time the packet is received and reclaimed either by a drop process if the queue has exceeded its allocation (static and dynamic) or by a dequeue process when the packet is transmitted on a link.
- FIG. 5 is an exemplary diagram of queue control engine 430 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- Queue control engine 430 may include oversubscription engine 510 and drop engine 520 .
- Oversubscription engine 510 may control whether any of queues 410 are permitted to output more packet information than their statically allocated bandwidth.
- Drop engine 520 may control whether to drop packet information from any of queues 410 .
- Oversubscription engine 510 and drop engine 520 will be described in more detail below. While these engines are shown as separate, they may be integrated into a single engine or may otherwise share data between them (connection not shown).
- FIG. 6 is an exemplary diagram of oversubscription engine 510 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- Oversubscription engine 510 may include bandwidth used random access memory (RAM) 610 , average bandwidth used RAM 620 , timer 630 , and control logic 640 .
- bandwidth used RAM 610 and average bandwidth used RAM 620 are registers implemented within one or more memory devices, such as a flip-flop.
- Control logic 640 may include logic that coordinates or facilitates the operation of the components of oversubscription engine 510 .
- control logic 640 may perform calculations, write or read data to or from the RAMs, or simply pass information between components of oversubscription engine 510 .
- Bandwidth used RAM 610 may include multiple entries, such as one entry per queue. Each of the entries may store a variable that represents the instantaneous amount of bandwidth used (bs) by the queue during a time interval (Ta).
- the bs value may be incremented by the length of the corresponding packet.
- the bs value may be reset at periodic times identified by timer 630 , such as the beginning or end of a time interval.
- Average bandwidth used RAM 620 may include multiple entries, such as one entry per queue. Each of the entries may store data that represents a time-averaged measurement of the bandwidth used by the queue (bu) as computed during the time interval Ta. For example, the time-averaged measurement may be determined using an exponential weighted averaging with a decay coefficient chosen to make the computation as efficient as possible (e.g., two adds and a shift per time step). The weights in such an exponential weighted averaging function may be programmable.
- FIG. 7 is an exemplary time line that facilitates measurement of bandwidth use according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- the units of bu are bytes/time-step. Let bu[i] be the value of the average bandwidth used as computed in time step i. Let bs[i] be the number of bytes sent by the queue in time step i and n be an integer that determines the decay coefficient (1 ⁇ 2 ⁇ n ).
- the final equation is an exponential weighted average with coefficient r.
- the following binomial expansion may be used: (1 ⁇ 2 ⁇ n ) k ⁇ 1 ⁇ k* 2 ⁇ n as long as k*2 ⁇ n is much less than 1. This means that as long as k is significantly less than 2 n , the terms are taken into account almost fully, but as k approaches 2 n , r k will start to drop off rapidly and so the terms become less and less significant.
- timer 630 may include a programmable register and/or counter that identifies the times at which time averaging may be performed to generate bu.
- the bs value in bandwidth used RAM 610 may be reset to zero.
- the current bs value may be read from bandwidth used RAM 610 and the average bu value (computed in the previous time interval) may be read from average bandwidth used RAM 620 .
- a weighted averaging function may then be performed on these values, such as the one described above, and the resultant value may be stored in average bandwidth used RAM 620 .
- the bs value in bandwidth used RAM 610 may then be reset to zero again at the beginning of the next time interval Ta +1 and the process repeated.
- Control logic 640 may reallocate bandwidth to permit oversubscription based on the bandwidth actually used by queues 410 . For example, control logic 640 may determine the average bandwidth bu used by each of queues 410 and reallocate bandwidth to certain ones of queues 410 if the queues permit oversubscription based on the RC parameter associated with the queues.
- FIG. 8 is a flowchart of exemplary oversubscription processing according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- control logic 640 performs oversubscription processing at the programmable time interval determined by timer 630 .
- control logic 640 performs this processing at other times, which may be based on certain criteria, such as traffic flow-related criteria.
- Control logic 640 may read bs values, corresponding to queues 410 , from bandwidth used RAM 610 . As described above, the bs value for a queue may be calculated based on the length of the packet(s) corresponding to the packet information dequeued by the queue during a time interval.
- Control logic 640 may use the bs values and the bu values from the previous time interval to determine the average bandwidth bu used by queues 410 during the current time interval (act 820 ). To make this determination, control logic 640 may take a time-averaged measurement of the bandwidth used by performing an exponential weighted averaging with a decay coefficient chosen to make the computation as efficient as possible (e.g., two adds and a shift per time step). A method for determining the average bandwidth bu has been described above.
- Control logic 640 may use the average bandwidth bu to reallocate bandwidth to queues 410 (act 830 ). For example, control logic 640 may identify which of queues 410 permit oversubscription based on the RC parameters associated with queues 410 . If the average bandwidth bu used by a queue is less than its statically allocated bandwidth, the unused portion of the bandwidth may be divided among the queues that are permitted to oversubscribe and need extra bandwidth. Any queue that is not permitted to oversubscribe cannot use any of the unused bandwidth.
- FIGS. 9A-9D are exemplary diagrams that illustrate oversubscription according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention. Assume that there are four queues Q 0 -Q 3 that share a stream's bandwidth B. Assume further that Q 0 has a weight of 0.7 and Q 1 -Q 3 each has a weight of 0.1. In other words, Q 0 is allocated 70% of the bandwidth B and each of Q 1 -Q 3 is allocated 10% of the bandwidth B. FIG. 9A illustrates such a configuration.
- FIG. 9B illustrates such a configuration.
- control logic 640 determines that traffic on Q 0 increases based on the average bandwidth bu used by Q 0 , such that Q 0 requires 40% of the bandwidth B. In this case, Q 0 reclaims some of its bandwidth from Q 1 and Q 2 . Since Q 0 needs 40% of the bandwidth B, the remaining 30% unused by Q 0 is divided between Q 1 and Q 2 .
- FIG. 9C illustrates such a configuration.
- the reallocation of bandwidth is equal between Q 1 and Q 2 as long as they can use that bandwidth. If Q 1 has just enough traffic to use 15% of the overall bandwidth, then Q 2 will get 35% of the total bandwidth.
- FIG. 9D illustrates such a configuration.
- the bandwidth allocated to queues 410 in a given time interval is related to both the queues' statically allocated bandwidth and the bandwidth used by the queues.
- This dynamic allocation process may be summarized as: (1) allocating the available bandwidth in proportion to the queues' statically allocated bandwidth; and (2) distributing the excess bandwidth among active queues in proportion to their excess bandwidths used in previous time intervals.
- Drop engine 520 may include RED logic that controls the amount of data memory system 310 used by queues 410 such that the average latency through queues 410 remains small even in the presence of congestion.
- the drop process is profiled in the sense that the probability of a packet information drop is not fixed, but is a user-specifiable function of how congested a queue is. Generally, the drop process may make its drop decision based on the ratio between the current queue length and the maximum permissible queue length.
- Drop engine 520 makes its drop decision based on the state of queues 410 , not on the state of the stream. Drop engine 520 may operate in a round robin fashion on all of the active queues. By design, it has a higher probability of examining more active queues rather than inactive queues to keep up with the data rate of a quickly-filling queue.
- the drop decision is made at the head of queues 410 rather than at the tail, as in conventional systems.
- a benefit of dropping at the head of queues 410 is that congestion is signaled earlier to traffic sources, thereby providing tighter latency control.
- a tail drop can result in the congestion signal being delayed by as much as Rtt compared to a head drop because a more recent packet is being dropped whose response time-out will expire later.
- head drop provides a way to cut back excess memory use when a queue's bandwidth suddenly drops because a previously inactive queue has started to use its share of the bandwidth again.
- FIG. 10 is an exemplary diagram of drop engine 520 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- Drop engine 520 may include static memory allocated RAM 1010 , memory used RAM 1020 , pending RED visit (PRV) RAM 1030 , indexing logic 1040 , drop profile 1050 , drop decision logic 1060 , and control logic 1070 .
- static allocated RAM 1010 , memory used RAM 1020 , and PRV RAM 1030 are registers implemented within one or more memory devices, such as a flip-flop.
- Control logic 1070 may include logic that coordinates or facilitates the operation of the components of drop engine 520 .
- control logic 1070 may perform calculations, write or read to or from the RAMs, or simply pass information between components of drop engine 520 .
- Static memory allocated RAM 1010 may include multiple entries, such as one entry per queue. Each of the entries may store the variable sma, corresponding to the queue, that identifies the amount of data memory system 310 that should be made available to the queue (in the case where it is not allowed to oversubscribe due to RC being set or all of the other queues using their allocated bandwidth and, thereby, sparing no unused bandwidth). As defined above, sma is defined as the round trip time Rtt multiplied by the statically allocated bandwidth sba.
- Memory used RAM 1020 may include multiple entries, such as one entry per queue. Each of the entries may store a variable mu that represents the amount of data memory system 310 actually being used by the queue. Storage space within data memory system 310 may be allocated dynamically at the time a packet is received and reclaimed at some time after the packet is transmitted by router 100 .
- the variable mu which counts bytes or cells (e.g., 64 byte data blocks) of data, may be used to track the amount of data memory system 310 used by the queue.
- the mu value When packet information is enqueued, the mu value may be incremented by the length of the corresponding packet.
- the mu value may be decremented by the length of the corresponding packet.
- PRV RAM 1030 may include multiple entries, such as one entry per queue. Each of the entries may store a variable pry that controls how many times the queue will be examined by drop engine 430 .
- the pry value When packet information is enqueued, the pry value may be incremented by one.
- the pry value may be decremented by one, if the pry value is greater than zero. The goal is to allow drop engine 430 to visit each packet at the head of the queue just once. A queue visited once may not be visited again unless the packet just visited got dropped or the packet gets dequeued by dequeue engine 420 .
- Indexing logic 1040 may include logic for creating an index into drop profile 1050 .
- Drop profile 1050 may include a memory that includes multiple addressable entries. Each of the entries may store a value that indicates the probability of a drop. For example, assume that drop profile 1050 includes 64 entries that are addressable by a six bit address (or index). In an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention, each of the entries includes an eight bit number representing a drop probability. The drop probability may always be greater than or equal to zero.
- FIG. 11 is an exemplary graph of a drop profile consistent with the principles of the invention. As shown by the graph, the drop profile is a monotonically non-decreasing function with the drop probability of zero at index zero and the drop probability of one at index 63 .
- an entry value of zero may be used to represent never drop
- an entry value of 255 may be used to represent always drop
- the index generated is a six bit value. In other implementations, other size indexes are possible.
- the ratio of mu/MAX results in a value larger than one.
- the index may contain a value that points to somewhere outside drop profile 1050 .
- drop decision logic 1060 may consider this a must drop situation and drop the packet unless the packet contains an attribute, such as a keep alive attribute, that indicates that the packet should not be dropped.
- an index threshold may be used. As shown in FIG. 11 , the drop profile is a monotonically non-decreasing function with the drop probability of zero at index zero and the drop probability of one at index 63 .
- the index threshold may be set, such that if the index value generated by indexing logic 1040 is less than or equal to the threshold value, the lookup in drop profile 1050 may be skipped and the packet not dropped.
- packet attributes such as the packet's Transmission Control Protocol (TCP) and/or Packet Level Protocol (PLP) may be used in conjunction with the index as an address into drop profile 1050 .
- drop profile 1050 may include multiple profile tables, each having multiple addressable entries.
- the packet attributes may be used to select among the profile tables. For example, two bits representing the TCP and PLP of a packet may be used to select among four different profile tables in drop profile 1050 .
- the index may then be used to identify an entry within the selected table. In this way, a certain set of attributes extracted from the packets may be used to perform an intelligent drop.
- Drop decision logic 1060 may include logic that makes the ultimate drop decision based on the drop probability in drop profile 1050 or other factors as described above. In other words, drop decision logic 1060 translates the drop probability into a drop decision for the packet information examined by drop engine 520 .
- FIG. 12 is an exemplary diagram of drop decision logic 1060 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- Drop decision logic 1060 includes random number generator 1210 , comparator 1220 , and AND gate 1230 .
- Random number generator 1210 may include a pseudo random number generator, such as a linear feedback shift register that creates a pseudo random number that has a uniform distribution between zero and one. Random number generator 1210 may generate a random number that has the same number of bits as the drop probability value from drop profile 1050 . To increase randomness, however, random number generator 1210 may generate a random number that has a greater number of bits as the drop probability value from drop profile 1050 .
- Random number generator 1210 may implement functions as represented by the following:
- Comparator 1220 may compare the random number from random number generator 1210 to the drop probability value from drop profile 1050 .
- AND gate 1230 may perform a logical AND operation on the result of the comparison and a “DO NOT DROP” signal, which may be generated based on the presence or absence of an attribute, such as a keep alive attribute, that may be extracted from the packet.
- comparator 1220 and AND gate 1230 may be designed to output a drop decision to: (1) drop the packet information if the random number is less than the drop probability value and the DO NOT DROP signal indicates that the packet information may be dropped; (2) not drop the packet information if the random number is less than the drop probability value and the DO NOT DROP signal indicates that the packet information should not be dropped; and (3) not drop the packet information if the random number is not less than the drop probability value regardless of the value of the DO NOT DROP signal.
- FIGS. 13A and 13B are flowcharts of exemplary processing by drop engine 520 according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- Drop engine 520 may operate in parallel to dequeue engine 420 . Therefore, packet information memory system 320 may include mechanisms to arbitrate between drop engine 520 and dequeue engine 420 competing for the same resource (i.e., the same packet information at the head of a queue). In implementations consistent with the principles of the invention, drop engine 520 and dequeue engine 420 may be permitted to access different packet information on the same queue.
- drop engine 520 may select a stream to examine (act 1305 ) ( FIG. 13A ).
- drop engine 520 may use a round robin technique or another technique to determine which of the possible streams to examine next.
- drop engine 520 may consider all of the queues in a round robin manner without first selecting a stream. In this case, act 1305 may be unnecessary.
- drop engine 520 may select a queue to examine based on, for example, the queues' pry values (act 1310 ). The drop engine 520 may use round robin arbitration to select the next queue with a pry value greater than zero.
- drop engine 520 may construct two bit vectors (HIVec and LOVec) and perform a round robin over these vectors to select the next queue to examine.
- HIVec and LOVec vectors may be defined as follows:
- FIG. 14 is an exemplary diagram of queue selection using the HIVec and LOVec vectors according to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention.
- drop engine 520 when drop engine 520 finds a queue i, it determines the variable dma (i.e., the average bandwidth used bu*Rtt) and, from it, the variable MAX (act 1315 ).
- MAX is defined as the maximum of the values of sma from static memory allocated RAM 1010 and dma.
- drop engine 520 From MAX, drop engine 520 generates an index into drop profile 1050 (act 1320 ). As described above, the index may be defined as: mu/MAX*64. In this case, the generated index may be a six bit number.
- drop engine 520 may drop the packet (if the packet does not contain an attribute, such as a keep alive attribute). If the resulting index value is below some threshold, drop engine 520 may bypass the drop profile lookup and not drop the packet.
- drop engine 520 may compare mu/MAX to the threshold to determine whether mu/MAX is less than or equal to the threshold (act 1325 ). If mu/MAX is less than or equal to the threshold, drop engine 520 may mark the packet as not to be dropped (act 1330 ). Marking may be done by simply setting a bit associated with the packet or by not dropping packet information from the queue.
- drop engine 520 may determine whether mu/MAX is greater than or equal to one (act 1335 ). If so, then drop engine 520 may determine whether the packet includes a packet attribute, such as a keep alive attribute, that indicates that it is not to be dropped (act 1340 ). The presence or absence of this packet attribute may be used to generate the DO NOT DROP signal. If the DO NOT DROP signal indicates that the packet should not be dropped, then drop engine 520 may mark the packet as not to be dropped (act 1345 ). Otherwise, drop engine 520 may mark the packet for dropping (act 1350 ).
- a packet attribute such as a keep alive attribute
- drop engine 520 may use the index to access drop profile 1050 and obtain a drop probability (act 1355 ) ( FIG. 13B ). If drop profile 1050 contains more than one profile table, drop engine 520 may use packet attributes to select one of the profile tables. Drop engine 520 may then use the index as an address into the selected profile table and read a drop probability value therefrom.
- Drop engine 520 may determine a drop decision by comparing the drop probability value to a random number (acts 1360 and 1365 ). The random number may be generated by random number generator 1210 . If the random number is less than the drop probability value, drop engine 520 may determine whether the packet includes a packet attribute, such as a keep alive attribute, that indicates that it is not to be dropped (act 1370 ). The presence or absence of this packet attribute may be used to generate the DO NOT DROP signal.
- a packet attribute such as a keep alive attribute
- drop engine 520 may mark the packet for dropping (act 1375 ). If the DO NOT DROP signal, in this case, indicates that the packet is not to be dropped, then drop engine 520 may mark the packet as not to be dropped (act 1380 ). If the random number is not less than the drop probability value, regardless of the value of the DO NOT DROP signal, then drop engine 520 may mark the packet as not to be dropped (act 1380 ). Marking may be done by simply setting a bit associated with the packet or by dropping or not dropping packet information from the queue.
- drop engine 520 may remove the associated packet information from the queue.
- the queue may discard the packet information itself when instructed by drop engine 520 .
- the drop decision may be based on one or more drop profiles that indicate the probability that the data will be dropped.
- the drop probability may be further processed to generate the ultimate drop decision.
- dequeue engine 420 and queue control engine 430 have been described as separate components. In other implementations consistent with the principles of the invention, the engines may be integrated into a single engine that both dequeues and drops packet information.
- RAMs random access memory elements
- other types of memory devices may be used in other implementations consistent with the principles of the invention.
- logic that performs one or more functions.
- This logic may include hardware, such as an application specific integrated circuit or a field programmable gate array, software, or a combination of hardware and software.
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Abstract
Description
bu[i]=bu[i−1]+2−n′(bs[i]−bu[i−1])
bu[i]=bu[i−1]*(1−2−n)+bs[i]*2−n
Substituting r=(1−2−n), the equation becomes:
As can be seen, the bandwidth used by a queue is a function of the bandwidth used by the queue in all the previous time intervals.
(1−2−n)k˜1−k*2−n
as long as k*2−n is much less than 1. This means that as long as k is significantly less than 2n, the terms are taken into account almost fully, but as k approaches 2n, rk will start to drop off rapidly and so the terms become less and less significant.
probability of drop=(entry value)/256.
index=(mu/MAX)*64,
where MAX is the maximum of the values of sma (static memory allocated) and dma (dynamic memory allocated, which is the amount of
index=(mu/sma)*64.
This may be considered a static index because the value of sma will not change. According to an implementation consistent with the principles of the invention, the index generated is a six bit value. In other implementations, other size indexes are possible.
lfsr_galois(int state) { | ||
int x0, x5, x12; | ||
if (0x0001 & state) { | ||
state = state>> 1; | ||
state = state {circumflex over ( )} 0x8000 {circumflex over ( )} 0x0800 {circumflex over ( )} 0x0010; | ||
} | ||
else state = state >> 1; | ||
return(state); | ||
} | ||
to generate the random number.
-
- for queuei, where i=0 to total number of queues:
- if (mui>MAXi), HIVec[i]=1;
- else {
- if (mui<(MAXi/X)), LOVec[i]=0;
- else LOVec[i]=(prv[i]>0)
- }
where X is an integer, such as 16. This conservesdrop engine 520 examinations of a queue when mu is small compared to MAX and forces dropengine 520 examinations when mu exceeds MAX. When mu is very small compared to MAX/X, the drop probability will be small. Keeping LOVec reset allowsdrop engine 520 to visit other more active queues.
- for queuei, where i=0 to total number of queues:
Claims (21)
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US14/178,815 US9106577B2 (en) | 2002-01-25 | 2014-02-12 | Systems and methods for dropping data using a drop profile |
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US11/853,190 US7746776B1 (en) | 2002-01-25 | 2007-09-11 | Systems and method for dropping data using a drop profile |
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US9106577B2 (en) | 2002-01-25 | 2015-08-11 | Juniper Networks, Inc. | Systems and methods for dropping data using a drop profile |
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Also Published As
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US20130128734A1 (en) | 2013-05-23 |
US9106577B2 (en) | 2015-08-11 |
US20140160933A1 (en) | 2014-06-12 |
US7283470B1 (en) | 2007-10-16 |
US8654645B2 (en) | 2014-02-18 |
US8335158B2 (en) | 2012-12-18 |
US20100220590A1 (en) | 2010-09-02 |
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